Nigeria's midfielder John Mikel Obi has made up his mind to
seek a better future in another club after starting just 6 league games in the
last premier league campaign. United Arab Emirates suitors Al Ain and Al Wahda
are reportedly leading the race to acquire the services of the 28-year old
midfielder but his Portugesse coach, Jose Mourinho has stalled the transfer
operation by refusing to santion it.
John Mikel Obi who has two years left on his contract, has
been told he remains part of manager Mourinho’s future plans.
“There’s absolutely no truth to reports linking Mikel with a move to Turkey or any Chinese club for that matter,” a source close to the talks said. “Only two clubs from the UAE showed strong interest last month but they could not meet his club’s valuation.
Mikel has fallen below the pecking order at Chelsea
following the arrival and performances of Nemanja Mattic. He fears warming the
bench for the next two years of his contract at Chelsea FC.
Fenerbahce seems to be interested in adding Mikel to their
squad but Chelsea will only listen to a US $16.8 million offer. The Turkish
club’s president Aziz Yildirim has told the local media they cannot meet
Chelsea’s valuation. “Chelsea want 15 million euros and Mikel asked for €5
million a season over four years. We are talking 35 million euros,” Yildirim
told reporters at their Topuk Yayla training ground.
Barclays Premier league giant, Chelsea has slammed a
staggering €35 millon price tag on Nigerian international John Mikel Obi for
any move in the ongoing transfer window. According to reports that surfaced on Sunday night, website
AA had quoted Fenerbahçe president Aziz Yildirim as saying in Turkey that
Chelsea’s management asked him to cough out €35 million for Mikel.
Aziz however didn’t say if he would meet the €35million
asking price for Mikel or look elsewhere for his replacement.
To this end, it has remained uncertain if Mikel would leave
Chelsea this season with the large number of European clubs seeking his
signature or renew his contract which expires in 2017.
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